“What do you mean?” Shelby asked. “Like a zoo?”
“Naw. Way better than that. There’s this open, grassy area at one end of town with all kinds of grazing animals. There are zebras and gazelles and even a giraffe named Millie.”
“Okay, now you’re just making stuff up,” she teased.
Nick made an X on his chest. “I swear. Besides, Fool’s Gold has an elephant.”
“I know, but Priscilla’s different. More like family.”
Aidan smiled. “You’ll accept an elephant as family, but not a giraffe?”
“When you put it like that, I guess we can have both.” She turned to Nick. “Okay, you’ve soaked long enough. Use one of the towels to dry your feet and we’ll move on to the next step of the pedicure.”
Nick did as he was told. “You’re not going to tell anyone about this, are you?” he asked his brother.
“Back at you,” Aidan said.
“Deal.”
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
JO PLACED THE pitcher of margaritas in the center of the table. “There’s something not right about this,” she muttered.
Felicia nodded. “It’s difficult when social norms are violated. In this case, the girls-only lunch. But it’s for a good reason. I doubt Aidan will be a regular fixture.” She eyed him. “Your quest to be friends with Shelby is admirable, but you will need to have boundaries for that relationship to work.”
Shelby felt her lips twitch as she tried not to smile. “Yeah, Aidan. We’re going to need to talk boundaries. You’re crowding me a little.”
He held both hands, palms up. “I asked for help and this is what I get? Aren’t you always telling the men in your life that it’s okay to admit you don’t know something? But when I do, this is the response? You’re going to have to decide on your message.”
Taryn picked up her margarita. “Well, damn. That’s an interesting tactic. I hate to say it, Aidan, but you’re right.”
Larissa grinned. “Oh, no. Hell is freezing over as we speak. Run for your lives.”
“It’s all funny until you want to talk trash about the guys,” Jo warned. “Then he’s going to be sitting here and what will you do?”
“Talk over him,” Shelby said cheerfully. “He won’t mind.”
She half expected Aidan to protest, but he only smiled. The man had confidence, she thought happily. She would give him that. And mad skills in the bedroom. Maybe one came from the other.
When Aidan had asked her advice on his ideas for more female-focused summer tours, she’d suggested he join her and her friends for lunch. When she’d put out the word about what he wanted, several of her friends had immediately agreed to help him. From there plans had morphed into a margarita lunch, which meant no work was going to get done that afternoon.
“Enough torturing Aidan,” Patience said as she picked up her glass. “A toast. To friends.”
They all touched glasses. Even Aidan. Taryn leaned toward him.
“You realize this makes you an honorary woman.”
One corner of his mouth turned up. “You say that like it’s a bad thing.”
“And here I thought you’d be flustered. All right.” She sighed. “Shelby, you can keep this one. He’s special.”
Shelby felt an odd kind of lurching sensation in her belly. Before she could say anything, Felicia shook her head.
“It’s not like that. They’re friends. Shelby explained it all to me when they first started spending time together. I think it’s an excellent experiment. I don’t suppose you’ll be writing a paper about your experiences when it’s all over, will you?” Her voice was wistful.
“You’re a freak,” Larissa cheerfully told the other woman. “And we love you.”
Conversation flowed all around them. It was the usual mishmash of getting caught up and sharing fun gossip. Who was dating, who was pregnant, who was going where on vacation. Shelby participated but her attention was on Aidan. Four months ago, he would have been squirming—both uncomfortable with the situation and anxious to get to his stuff. But now he simply sipped his margarita and ate chips. Every now and then he added a comment or two.
She liked that he liked her friends. She liked how they could hang out together. Being around him was so easy, she thought. Comfortable. They never ran out of things to say. The fact that the man could turn her on with just a glance was simply a bonus.
Jo returned with their lunches. When she left, Taryn smiled at Aidan.
“This is the quietest we’re going to get, so if you want to talk about your business, now would be the time.”
Best of My Love (Fool's Gold, #20)
Susan Mallery's books
- A Christmas Bride
- Just One Kiss
- Chasing Perfect (Fool's Gold #1)
- Almost Perfect (Fool's Gold #2)
- Sister of the Bride (Fool's Gold #2.5)
- Finding Perfect (Fool's Gold #3)
- Only Mine (Fool's Gold #4)
- Only Yours (Fool's Gold #5)
- Only His (Fool's Gold #6)
- Only Us (Fool's Gold #6.1)
- Almost Summer (Fool's Gold #6.2)